6 Simple (but Effective) Ways to Maximize Your Donor Data

Marketing and Social Media

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Adam Weinger is the President of Double the Donation, the leading provider of matching gift tools to nonprofit organizations and educational institutions. Adam created Double the Donation in order to help nonprofits increase their annual revenue through corporate matching gift and volunteer grant programs. 

Your database is among your nonprofit’s most important assets!

If you’re not sure that your organization is getting the most value and use out of its donor data, it’s crucial that you take some proactive steps to change that.

By remembering some simple techniques and incorporating them into your data reporting, you can make a major investment in your nonprofit’s ability to make smarter fundraising decisions. Try these six key ways to maximize the usefulness of your donor data:

  1. Automate data input to your CRM.
  2. Integrate your donation and data software.
  3. Set clear policies for donor data.
  4. Segment your donor data.
  5. Refine your marketing strategies.
  6. Look for underutilized donor metrics.

Remember, strong data creates stronger financial, marketing, and fundraising strategies!

Use these tips and the linked resources in this article to begin strengthening your donor database and bolstering your organization’s data infrastructure.

1.  Automate data input to your CRM 💻

Automated data input for any interactions with donors is essential for maintaining a truly useful database.

A comprehensive database of donor information and records will reveal important propensity trends, enabling your organization to better anticipate giving potential and habits in both existing and future donors. This kind of insight is key to making smarter marketing and fundraising decisions!

Having more data lets you identify more trends, but another main benefit of data input automation is simply the fact that your staff’s time will be freed up to better analyze this data. Rather than manually entering or formatting it for hours at a time, good software will offer a way to fully customize your automatic input settings.

Automatically archiving email records of donor interactions is another smart data move. Not only does this enable you to develop stronger relationships, it also makes it easier to reference your past donor relations and engagement strategies.

The main point: Use online donation tools and email platforms that can automatically populate your database software.

2. Integrate your donation + data software ⚙️

The wealth of digital tools available today make it easier than ever to collect, organize, refine, and use your data in new ways. In addition to automatic input features, CRM integration capabilities are a crucial element to look for in any nonprofit software solution.

Regardless of the exact work your nonprofit does or the types of donors you most often target, there are CRM apps perfectly suited to help you and your data work smarter. With tools integrated directly into your database and management system, you can more easily track and record every important metric from your:

  • Fundraising events of any size
  • Peer-to-peer fundraising campaigns
  • Charity auctions and mobile bidding events

The main point: Always make sure that your fundraising software solutions can integrate with your CRM. This makes them doubly useful as both fundraising and data collection tools.

3. Set clear data policies for donor data 🗄️

No matter how much donor data you have or how effective your collection methods are, your database can become useless without some overarching guidelines in place!

Set some clear policies for data input. This is the only way to ensure that your database is organized, but most importantly, useful. Include clearly labeled sections for any type of information that might be added to an entry.

Setting up a regularly scheduled time once or twice a week to check newer entries and updates for formatting correctness is a great way to stay on top of your donor database upkeep.

Additionally, if your organization is looking to improve its database in the context of a wider capital campaign, a fundraising consultant can help you establish some data guidelines and connect you with essential donor research resources.

The main point: An organized database is a useful database. Set some concrete policies to ensure your data remains tidy as it grows.

4. Segment your donor data ➗

Data segmentation is an essential part of maintaining an organized and useful donor database.In fact, one of the main purposes of your donor database should be to make the data segmentation process easier!

Analyzing the data of your existing donors is key to directing meaningful growth. Instead, too many nonprofits make the common data mistake of focusing too heavily on the growth itself, forgetting to look for insights in the data already at hand.

Data segmentation is generally the best way to identify important donation trends, and it’s also a crucial technique for:

  • Understanding your existing base.
  • Targeting your marketing efforts.
  • Developing effective fundraising strategies.
  • Identifying weak spots in your data collection.

The main point: Segmenting your donor information by donor level, giving history, giving potential, preferred communication methods, or any other metric is an extremely important part of using your database to its full potential.

5. Refine your marketing strategies 📣

If it doesn’t already do so, your nonprofit should focus heavily on its marketing strategies. This is not only because it’s important to attract new donors, but also because a strong marketing strategy can work wonders for your data collection and upkeep.

Great marketing and up-to-date reporting tools will create a feedback loop of data refinement in a process like this:

  1. Use your segmented database to refine and target your marketing strategies, focusing on specific sectors of your donor base.
  2. Collect some critical metrics from your targeted marketing campaigns. For instance, how many recipients opened your email? What kind of email marketing does this sector of your donors best respond to?
  3. Add this marketing data to your database and improve your understanding of that sector of your donors.
  4. Use your data to constantly target your marketing and refine your database.

The main point: Don’t think of your marketing and donor data analytics as completely separate tasks. Use each to continually support and refine the other!

6. Look for underutilized donor metrics 📊

When collecting data or looking for ways to expand or refine your entries for important donors, be sure to identify some metrics that are extremely useful but often overlooked.

For example, political contribution history is a valuable metric to have for any donor, existing or prospective, since it can serve as a very accurate indicator of commitment and giving potential.

Top prospect research resources should provide you access to this kind of information, but there are plenty of ways to conduct your own research, too. For political contribution history, for instance, you can search official contributions through the FEC, or even find online databases specific to your locale.

Get creative when working on growing your donor database. It’s important to learn as much about your donors and their giving habits, but don’t forget to consider metrics that can more indirectly provide these insights.

The main point: Valuable but often overlooked metrics like employer information can be extremely effective additions to your donor database, especially when it comes to fundraising strategies regarding corporate gift matching. Need more help taking advantage of corporate gift matching revenue? Check out Double the Donation’s 360MatchPro tool, which integrates seamlessly into Qgiv forms and all your favorite CRMs.


Conclusion

If you’re unsure if your organization’s donor database is providing as much value to your work as it can, read through each of these techniques listed above. Which of them has your organization already implemented into its data practices?

Strong donor databases require constant maintenance and cultivation, but the rewards for doing so can be immense!

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